Trump's lawyers withdrew from representing his campaign in its biggest Pennsylvania election lawsuit one day before the hearing

APD NEWS

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On the eve of a hearing in the biggest election-related lawsuit the Trump campaign has filed in Pennsylvania, three of the four lawyers representing the campaign withdrew as counsel.

The lawyers, Linda Kerns, John Scott, and Douglas Bryan Hughes, "move to withdraw their appearance as counsel for Plaintiffs," they said in a court filing Monday evening. Marc Scaringi "will act as counsel for Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs consent to this withdrawal."

A federal judge said the hearing will not be delayed and wrote "counsel for the parties are expected to be prepared for argument and questioning."

In the wide-ranging federal lawsuit against Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, the Trump campaign alleged irregularities in the way ballots were counted throughout the state. They argued that 14,000 votes should be thrown out and that the election process in Pennsylvania was inherently unconstitutional.

They also alleged that ballots were handled differently in different counties, that huge piles of mail ballots were illegally counted, and that Pennsylvania voters were improperly allowed to "cure" issues with defective ballots. Business Insider also reported that the two counties the Trump campaign's lawsuit alleged that voter fraud occurred in overwhelmingly voted for the president.

The campaign submitted a revised version of the lawsuit days later that retracted many of its original allegations. Boockvar's office argued that the lawsuit was filed "on the basis of repeatedly rejected legal theories and no evidence."

Last week, the law firm representing the Trump campaign in the case, Porter Wright Morris & Arthur, moved to withdraw from it. Hearings in the case are set for Tuesday and Thursday.

President-elect Joe Biden won the 2020 election by flipping Pennsylvania and the upper midwestern battleground states of Michigan and Wisconsin. The Trump campaign has filed lawsuits in Pennsylvania and Michigan and demanded a recount in Wisconsin.

As of Monday, Biden's lead in Pennsylvania is nearly 70,000 votes, and it's unlikely any of the Trump campaign's lawsuits will result in a reversal of Trump's loss in the state.

(BUSINESS INSIDER)